A breach of Utah Department of Health data in
March 2012 has not been directly tied to any
incident of identity theft, according to a
report to state lawmakers Thursday. Hackers
downloaded personal information of 780,000
Utahns.

It seems the situation in Syria changes by the
day. The question remains, will the U.S go to
war, and what will that look like? The last
time the U.S. went to war it was against Iraq.
To some, the situations seem similar. To
others, they are vastly different.

A trio of companies — the School Improvement Network, Indus Valley
Partners and Nature Food Products — have announced plans to
expand their operations in the Beehive State, bringing with them an
estimated 1,100 new jobs.

A semitrailer filled with powdered cement
rolled into the Weber River around 5 a.m.
Friday. It began leaking diesel fuel. Eighty
tons of cement will need to be pumped out from
the trailers before they are removed from the
vehicle.

By truck and helicopter, thousands of people stranded by floodwaters came down from the Colorado Rockies on Friday, two days after seemingly endless rain turned normally scenic rivers and creeks into coffee-colored rapids that wrecked scores of roads and wiped out neighborhoods.

Construction on the new federal courthouse in Salt Lake City is nearly
90 percent complete. The building at 351 S. West Temple is set to
open next spring, and it looks nothing like the stately Frank E. Moss
U.S. Courthouse it is replacing.